Pregnant Wife Played The Hidden-Camera Footage, Then Her Lawyer Walked In With The Custody File-QuynhTranJP

Richard Mendes did not raise his voice when he stepped into Eleanor Vance’s living room.

That was what made James Parker stop moving.

The black briefcase in Richard’s hand clicked once as he set it on the coffee table, beside the divorce folder, the shattered teacup, and the blue hydrangea vase that had just turned an entire marriage into evidence.

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Carol Parker still had one hand clamped around the sofa arm. Her pearl earrings shook against her neck. Tea soaked into the pale rug under her feet, spreading in a brown crescent around broken porcelain.

James stood between the television and the coffee table, his face drained of color, his tie loosened, his mouth still half-open from the word he had not finished.

Insane.

That was what he had called Eleanor.

Richard looked at him, then at Carol, then at the frozen black screen where their faces reflected faintly.

“Good evening,” he said. “I’m Eleanor Vance’s attorney.”

Carol blinked hard, as if she could reset the room by refusing to understand it.

James recovered first. His voice came out thin and sharp.

“She recorded us illegally.”

Richard opened the briefcase.

The sound of the metal latches snapped through the living room.

Eleanor stood beside the coffee table with one hand resting over her stomach. She could feel the baby shift under her palm, a small pressure against the place Carol had tried to empty with warm soup and soft words.

Richard removed a stack of documents and placed them in three neat piles.

“One copy has already been delivered to my office. One copy was sent this afternoon to the Westchester County Police Department. One copy will be used in family court.”

Carol’s lips parted.

“To the police?”

Her voice had lost its careful sweetness. It came out dry, almost childish.

Richard did not look away.

“Yes, Mrs. Parker. The video of you adding an unidentified substance to food intended for a pregnant woman, the private laboratory report identifying compounds capable of causing uterine contractions, and the audio recordings of Mr. Parker discussing prior incidents are now part of a formal evidence packet.”

James took one step toward the table.

“Audio recordings don’t prove anything. I was drunk. People say things.”

Eleanor finally looked at him.

He had used that same tone when explaining perfume. That same polished certainty when telling her not to overthink. That same soft contempt dressed as logic.

Richard slid the top page toward him.

“This is not only about what you said while drinking. It is also about what you said to Sophia Miller at 3:38 p.m. two days later, while sober, in this same living room.”

James’s eyes snapped to Eleanor.

She did not blink.

He knew exactly which call Richard meant.

The call where Sophia had panicked.

The call where James had lowered his voice and told her his mother had only done it because Eleanor could not carry a child.

The call where he had separated women into two categories: useful and disposable.

Carol turned toward her son.

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